U.S. Economy Slows, Prices Spike Higher Amid Signs Of Capacity Constraints

 | Oct 05, 2018 06:36

  • IHS Markit PMI data point to economy growing at annualised rate approaching 3% in Q3
  • Slower growth compared to earlier in the year reflects signs of peaking demand and rising capacity constraints
  • Prices charged rise at steepest rate in survey history
  • Employment growth highest for over three years as firms expand capacity
  • September PMI survey data added to signs that the US economy continued to expand at a solid rate in the third quarter, albeit with the pace of expansion down on that seen in the second quarter.

    At least some of the slowdown can be attributed to capacity constraints limiting growth in many companies, despite firms stepping up their hiring. A consequence was a further acceleration in price pressures as demand often exceeded supply. Average prices charged for goods and service rose at the fastest rate seen in the survey's nine-year history.

    Slower growth in September

    Looking across both manufacturing and services, business activity growth slowed for a fourth straight month in September. At 53.9, the final seasonally adjusted IHS Markit U.S. Composite PMI™ Output Index dipped from 54.7 in August. The latest reading was the lowest since January.